Yuanqi

In traditional Chinese medicine and Chinese culture, yuán qì (元氣) is an innate or prenatal qi. This inborn qi is differentiated from acquired qi that a person may develop over their lifetime.

Porkert describes the concept as "the metaphorical designation of the inborn constitution, the vital potential that is gradually used up in the course of life. It may be conserved but never replenished."

The term has been used since at least the Han Dynasty, where it is found in the chapter 'Lu Li Zhi Shang/律历志上' of the History Book, 'Han Shu.'[1]

Usage in Japanese

In modern times it has come to be used in a colloquial manner in Japanese (where it is pronounced genki (元気)) to mean "healthy" or "energetic", a usage that has more recently been borrowed back into Chinese. This colloquial usage of the term forms the basis of a variety of Japanese expressions, including the standard casual greeting, genki desu ka (元気ですか), which translates to "are you well?".[2] As the equivalent of "How are you doing?" in English, it is a rhetorical question and generally answered in the affirmative.

gollark: <@116952546664382473>
gollark: Yes, so run `shell` in that environment.
gollark: It's not hard, just```lualocal env = setmetatable({ fs = harborFS}, __index = _ENV)load(code, "@filename", "t", env)```or so.
gollark: Urn, that programming language.
gollark: urN, I mean.

See also

References

  1. Gudai hanyu cidian bianxie zubian 2006 : Gudai Hanyi Cidian (Classical Chinese Dictionary). 2006. Beijing: Shangwu yinshuguan.
  2. http://eow.alc.co.jp/%E5%85%83%E6%B0%97/UTF-8/?ref=sa
  • Porkert, The Theoretical Foundations of Chinese Medicine MIT Press (1974) ISBN 0-262-16058-7


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